Diamond Enthusiast

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But the US army has destroyed mosques and killed civilians in Iraq. The accusations are not false, although maybe one-sided.
"Even thoe [sic] you are risking your life for our country, have you seen how many civilians you or some other soldier killed? ...I know your [sic] trying to save our country and kill the terrorists but you are also destroying holy places like Mosques." is maybe a dumb thing to have sent to a soldier serving in Iraq, but it's a valid point.
I take it, by the irrelevant mention of the writer's being Muslim, the snide 'sic's and remarks about smiley faces, that the newspaper is trying to show this exercise in the worst possible light. If those two sentences were the most outrageous they could come up with, then it's a storm in a teacup. Out of 21 letters "nine of the students made clear their distaste for the president or the war" - isn't that more support for the war than the opinion polls show?
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Diamond Enthusiast

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I agree that it was odd to have kids send such letters to soldiers. They should have gone to the Whitehouse instead.
Of course, once the soldiers were there and thrown into the fight they had to blow up buildings being used by snipers, and civilians are an inevitable casualty of war - particularly of the kind of intensive bombing campaign waged, and of the confused fight against guerillas indistinguishable at times from civilians.
But who decided to send the soldiers to Iraq in the first place? And who decided that Falluja (for instance) was to be flattened? Letters questioning those decisions should go to the higher-ups.
The invasion wasn't "for the fun of it", but it wasn't for the destruction of illegal WMD, either. And if it was for democracy in the Middle East, a murderous bombing campaign was an odd way to attempt that.
The letters were wrongly addressed.
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